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    Chinese Luxury Hotels Brace For Another Rough Year

    Five-star hotels favored by China's bureaucrats are faring the worst in China's crackdown on corruption, but boutique locations are doing fine with a trendier clientele.
    Jing Daily
    Jing DailyAuthor
      Published   in Finance

    With curbs on Chinese officials’ banquet and travel budgets, China’s anti-corruption campaign hit high-end hotels and restaurants hard in 2013. As the crackdown shows no sign of slowing down, this trend will continue in the coming year, says expert Shaun Rein in a new Wall Street Journal video interview with China wealth reporter Wei Gu.

    “Four- and five-star Chinese luxury hotels” that rely on business from Chinese officials will continue to be hit the hardest, says Rein. This may even result in hotel closures—the JC Mandarin in Shanghai has already been shuttered. However, more consumer-oriented hotels such as boutique locations will weather the storm, since they’re not frequented by bureaucrat types. Watch the video embedded above for the full interview, including his take on whether hotels' coping measures will prove effective.

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